McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 7 Jan 1983, p. 37

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((friday)) § 1/14/83 6:00PM O O O O (23) IB © News O Eyewitness News O Barney Miller CD (g) © @ Three's Company CD MocNeH-lehrer Report (iD Ml (TO) Untamed World m Happy Days Again ID Nature of Things CD Inside the NFL CD Newswatch Entertainment Tonight 03 'Youl' Mag. for Women CD NCAA Basketball Report ffl m Zola Levin Live CD You Can't Do That On TV ££J Winners 03 Soap 1 6:30 PM O CD ® © Family Feud Q Entertainment Tonight O © CD M*A*S*H o Jeffersons m Wild World of Animals (53) 0D ® MacNeil-Lehrer Report CD P.M. Magazine Three's Company (D Alice ® (26) Informacion © Friday Night Boxing €39 ESPN SportsCenter S><3) Jimmy Swaggart €0 Black Beauty 60 08) AH 1 ̂ the Family ©Andy Griffith © NBA Basketball: New York at Atlanta 7:00 PMOO O (23) Duke. of Hazzard Boss Hogg has to play dead to escape a pair of hired killers. (60 min.) . 6t 19 CD @0 Powers of Matthew Star Matthew recognizes a movie stuntman as a childhood buddy. (R) (60 min.) O CD CD Bensen O NBA Basketball: Chicago at Indiana CD (3D MOVIE: One Russian Summer' Drama of a summer in Rus­ sia showing the passion and violence of today. Oliver Reed, John McEnery, Claudia Cardinale. 1973 CD © 31 © Washington Week/Review Paul Duke is joined by top Washington journalists analyz­ ing the week's news. CD Cable Health World Report Shopping by TV by Kim Cooper Valuable consumer opportunities will be offered on the CBN Cable Network starting this month on "The Winning Shopper." The show is available exclusively on CBN Cable and will be shown every Saturday from 6 to 7 p.m. "The Winning Shopper" allows viewers to do their comparison shopping in their own home. Interested viewers will be able to order a "Smart Shopper" card granting them access to more than 50,000 products at discount rates. Card holders call and order by- phone the product or service they see on "The Winning Shopper." Prod­ ucts range from major appliances to cameras, furniture, china and even automobiles. Prices are 10-to-40 percent below manufacturers' suggested retail prices. But the consumer doesn't have to buy to enjoy the benefits of "The Winning Shopper." There may be other special deals and information provided during the show. Card holders are provided an "800" phone number to call and comparison- shop Computer operators are on-call with data available on name-brand goods and their prices Program segments include showcases for new merchandise, bargain-hunter segments, rebate offers, as well as free publications and services, weekly specials on heavily discounted items, product demonstrations and viewer partici­ pation games. Plans are also being made to include financial, insurance, barter and travel segments "The Winning Shopper" is a production of Metromedia Inc. and Comp-U-Card of America Inc. • , \ « ' ' Kim Cooper is publicity director of the CBN Gjibte Network. „ iv, @1983 Computog CD MOVIE: Gollipoli' CD MOVIE: Rollover' CD® Neal Frisby CD MOVIE: Blow Out1 WO Playboy Sex and Sensuality Test Mis Huespedes CD Professional Rodeo from Mesquite, TX (58) Jimmy Swaggart Livewire PAGE 21 © 0$ Bowling MOVIE: Where Angels Go, Trouble Follows' Trouble follows five nuns and a busload of girls as they travel to California for a youth roily. Stella Stevens, Slisan Saint James, Robert Taylor. 1968. 7:30 PM O CD CD New Odd Couple CD (3D © (3) Wall Street Week louis Rukeyser analyzes the '80s with a weekly review of economic and investment matters. €®y@WD@QDD By Aphrodite Jones 'Faerie Tales' return Due to the wonderful success of Shelley Duvall's first two "Faerie Tale Theatre" presenta­ tions in late 1982, Show­ time has signed her to produce six new tales starring some of the industry's biggest talents. Miss Duvall will produce "Jack and the Beanstalk," "Rapunzel," "Sleeping Beauty" and "The Nightingale" for the national pay-TV service. Two tales are still to be announced. "Faerie Tale Theatre" is the brainchild of Miss Duvall, the actress best- known for playing Olive Oyl in "Popeye." Miss Duvall's idea of dramatiz­ ing the classic fairy tales stemmed from her pas­ sion for collecting antique illustrated books, a collec­ tion including hundreds of tales that Miss Duvall real­ ized would translate well to TV. Each hour-long pro­ gram promises quality family entertainment with major performers and top writing and directing talent. Miss Duvall approached her many contacts in the film and television industry to engage the on-air person­ alities in the project. "So much of this busi­ ness is connections. I just called my friends and asked them if they would 'be interested in a particu­ lar part," Miss Duvall said during a recent interview in Los Angeles. "If they know that a good writer and a good director are involved, they want to do if because they want the chance to work with other talented people." Already cast in "Jack Shelley Duvall and the Beanstalk" are D'ennis Christopher, Elliott Gould and Jean Staple- ton, while "Rapunzel" features Beverly D'An- gelo, Bernadette Peters and Christopher Reeve. The programs are slated to run throughout the spring season. "All of the stars love the idea of 'Faerie Tale Theatre' and the most unlikely personalities are coming to me about doing them," Miss Duvall said. "I'm talking to Lauren Hutton and Cher about possible future tales.. I think the idea appeals to everybody because the tales have been tried and tested for hundreds of years." Past. ".Faerie Tale Theatre" productions starred Robin Williams in "The Frog Prince" and Miss Duvall in "Rumpel- .stiltskin.'-' "I thought the 'Rumpel- stiltskin' role was too good to let go so I did it but it's very hard to pro­ duce and star at the same time," Miss Duvall said. "Right now I'm into the producing end of things." © 1983 Compulog

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